Adaptive UnitI
Adaptive UnitI
Adaptive UnitI
Book
Adaptive control
-astrom and witten mark
Topics covered
• What is adaptive control? (Chap 1)
• Deterministic self tuning regulators (chap 3)
• Model reference adaptive systems (chap 5)
• Properties of adaptive systems (chap 6)
• Auto tuning (chap 8)
• Gain scheduling (chap 9)
• Robust and self oscillating systems (chap 10)
• Practical issues and implementation (chap 11)
Introduction
• “to adapt” means to change a behavior to
conform to new circumstances.
• An adaptive controller
a controller that can modify its behavior in
response to the changes in dynamics of the
processes and the disturbances acting on the
process.
Contd..
• An adaptive controller
a controller with adjustable parameters
and a mechanism for adjusting the
parameters.
• The parameters are adjusted to compensate
for the changes in dynamics of the plant and
the disturbances acting on the plant.
• The controller becomes nonlinear because of
the parameter adjustment mechanism
A block diagram of the adaptive
controller
Description
• An adaptive control system can be thought of
as having two loops.
• One loop is a normal feedback with the
process and the controller.
• The other loop is the parameter adjustment
loop.
• The parameter adjustment loop is usually
slower than the normal feedback loop.
Circumstances under which adaptive control can be
preferred:
• Gain scheduling
• Model-Reference Adaptive System (MRAS)
• Self-Tuning Regulator (STR)
• Dual Control
Gain Scheduling
• Gain scheduling is an adaptive control
strategy, where the gain of the system is
determined and based on its value the
controller parameters are changed.
• This approach is called gain scheduling
because
– the scheme was originally used to measure the
gain and then change, that is, schedule the
controller to compensate for changes in the
process gain.
Block diagram of system with gain
scheduling
Description
• The system can be viewed as having two loops.
• an inner loop composed of the process and the
controller
• outer loop contains components that adjust the
controller parameters on the basis of the
operating conditions.
• regarded as mapping from process parameters to
controller parameters.
• It can be implemented as a function or a table
lookup.
Contd..
• The concept of gain scheduling originated in
connection with the development of flight control
systems.
• In process control,
the production rate-a scheduling variable,
time constants and time delays are inversely
proportional to production rate.
• Gain scheduling is a very useful technique for
reducing the effects of parameter variations.
Advantages and disadvantages
• Advantages:
• Parameters can be changed quickly in response to
changes in plant dynamics
• very easy to apply
• Drawbacks:
• It is an open-loop adaptation scheme, with no real
learning or intelligence
• The design required for its implementation is
enormous.
Model – Reference Adaptive
System (MRAS)
• Used to solve a problem in which the
performance specifications are given in terms
of a reference model.
• This model tells how the process output
ideally should respond to the command signal.
Block diagram of MRAS
• composed of two loops.
• The inner loop - the process and an ordinary
feedback controller.
• The outer loop adjusts the controller parameters
in such a way that the error, which is the
difference between the process output y and
model output ym is small.
• The MRAS was originally introduced for flight
control.
• In this case, the reference model describes the
desired response of the aircraft to joystick
motions.
• The key problem with MRAS is
to determine the adjustment mechanism so that a
stable system, which brings the error to zero is
obtained.
• parameter adjustment mechanism, called MIT rule was
used in original MRAS.
• The discrete time system can also be represented in transfer function form
as:
• Where, z is the z-transform variable.
Controller Structures